Former Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf believes that he os the panacea for Pakistan if it were to be saved from being a failed state, thanks to the 'inept and pathetic performance' by President Asif Ali Zardari led civilian government in Islamabad.
Musharraf, who earlier this year announced his comeback to Pakistani politics with the formation of a new party -- the All Pakistan Muslim League -- that would contest elections in 2013, said during an interaction at the Atlantic Council, a Washington, DC-based think tank, "It's always the first step that overawes people, that it's too big. It's too big if you think it's too big. You think that way, because you don't have that leadership in you."
Musharraf said that in his case, "I presume it's not too big because, number one, I left not because my popularity was rock-bottom. I was the most popular man in Pakistan till 2007. There is no doubt in my mind, I know that."
He argued, "It is in 2007 that political turmoil took place because of certain legal actions that I took, for which there was a reason, but I don't want to get involved in that. It was not that Pakistan was going down. It was not that the socio-economic development of Pakistan was going down. It was not that the condition of the people, their welfare, their well-being was going down."
Musharraf said that at the time he left office, the poverty rate in Pakistan, according to World Bank figures, had been halved, from 34 percent to 17 percent. "Which government has done this?" he asked. "And the people of Pakistan know it. Poverty was halved in the seven years that I was there."
He said in 2008, when he resigned, even though his popularity had declined, "it didn't touch rock bottom. I was popular in a lot of segments in Pakistan."
Musharraf said today Pakistan was suffering and this was the reason "for again, people thinking of me, that I could deliver (them) from the darkness. I said that in this darkness, the people of Pakistan are not seeing any light."
He added, "I don't have to elaborate, everyone knows what is happening in Pakistan as far as governance is concerned."
Musharraf said, "The people of Pakistan are yearning for deliverance and that is why the first step has a lot of relevance and I think there is a lot of chance of success," for him to make a resounding political comeback.
He acknowledged, "I cannot be sure, but I believe that it is better to try and fail, than to go down not trying at all."
Musharraf also took a hefty swipe at Washington's consistent declarations of support for the Zardari government, saying it is the democratically elected government in Pakistan.
"Democracy, ladies and gentlemen," he said, "is a tool to deliver for the progress of the state, and the welfare, well-being
'Why isn't Indian nuke bomb called Hindu bomb?'
Yes, we trained militants against India: Musharraf
Sharif 'sold Kashmir to India,' says Musharraf
Musharraf planned coup for a year, says report
Musharraf could have prevented Benazir murder: UN